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NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1867. - 5 he faithfully execute the laws if his subor.-| remove officials who have been of official The movetiients of the and thet Bis wife anne seeseiene ae ane aad ut aca fc pe fedets maarried ba. " Boe. gay whether’ the Easutien eras Under the laws of Congress, where a general power was | mitted to run in jalené with his granted in the constitution, all the incidental powers to | officers, It is also charged that his brother is gars Se. ware anally fouled te Contel Canter F GENCE. Milford; coulu “age; received a gold watch and chaim ¢ ro Saaly y, who, before hor marr. “* ‘yee bg pole ry CE i Hon org ~ ed thea COMMMONERS OF THE SOKING FuND.—The Commis.'| from her husbaca, 4° the one she received sub- this brilliant campaign he was promoted to the rank of | sioner of the Sinking Fund met yesterday morning at | “*}2¢0Uy. * adjourned, in coneideration of and ordered to carry it out were necessarily granted also, Thus the | the Assistant Disirict A of Now York, with At this point 2 Reconstruction laws empowered the President to ap- | special charge of whiskey matters; that he has a cousin | Washingisa, in 180G ee eee done Pac eTors at | sloven ofelock. Some routine business wae transacted | the fagte of the wan % "Ml Hn “oie th THE REMOVAL OF GENERAL SHERIDAN point District commanders. The right to remove ana | there, with general powors of seizure; that his chief | and in July of the ue your was ordered 10 New oy oe a . ‘ss'gn new commanders was & necessary incident to the | deputy bas a brother-in-law there, with general powers scene Ge rae ‘ing out there. In Beptember | was taken up, The Board adjourned without day, ° 22. AW sek es original power of assigning them to duty, ‘The Prosi- | of seisure; that his second deputy is in New York, and | at Washington and) denne tine aati sere of ieex | _ Maerrsa ov Tammany Commirran.—The Sachems of Old BITva.a** dent continued at some length to answer the objections | bas « brother with the Inspector and a lawyer imported | assisted in revising the rules and fe Vd and the | Tammany met yesterday at the Masonic Hall, on Thir- ar ae ~~ Dr. James Jac! The Boston papers announee the last, of this well known physicion, at the articles of war for the government of thearmy. On | teenth street, near Fourth avenue. This hall is very May 7 General Canby was appointed a major ral aod ordered to take command of the Military Division of | !8'¢and handsomely decorated, and has been hired by ; ’ of General Grant, and finally concluded by saying | from Washington; that one of his clerks, a Mr, Johu- Promulgation ofthe President’s | frautymatir very order he should issue was to pro- | #00, has two brothers-in-law who are inspectora of whis- an Voke ® political essay from Genoral Grant, adairs would | key, and that most of all the subordinates of the Inter- | Western Mississippi, with headquarters at New Orloan Tammany for one year, until the Old Wigwam down | or Order by General Grant. necessarily come to a stand still. " nal Revenue Department have some one related to them Sebeqnentiy be Organized tao dee that capiured 4 py been renoralet, sae monet amerta find pollege end geancllie! Aes bys ry ania be pom ey Ne farts arbor, to atorm the @ committee appoint General - » ’ born ober 3, 4 wa General Grant did not make many arguments during | OF Fepresenting them in New York, works of the cliy wien it reseed On June on mittee on Contested Seats to. receive’ the several repre | 1796 he graduated at Harvard College, and in 1802 wus the interview, and concluded by saying to the President Condition of General Schofictd. 1865, General Canby, who had been promoted to the | Seutatives of the opposing parties in the different wards. | admitted to tho Massachusetts Medical. Sooiety. Hesoom rank of brevot brigadier general in th Was assigned to the command of Louisiana and Texas, General Hancock Ordered to the Com- that he would like to withdraw his written protest to General Schofield, who is sick at Hampton, ts reported regular army, The Third, Eighth, Tenth, Thirteenth, Fifteenth, Eig! the order assigning Genéral Hancock to the Fifth Mili- | Detter to-day, @ Department of | teenth and Twenty-second wards were all contested. popular among | Ten minutes’ time was allowed each representative of won a high position in his prof came Professor of the Theory and, Pras ot ee E z id became in the Harvard Medical tary District, and that he would send a written request Union Pacific Railroad. the people of those States for the able and impartial | @Scb separate ward, aod thus considerable time was con- ‘ al sehoo!, which position bese, mand of the Fifth Military District, | wr Ds withdrawal Oo" rsing to. dopurt tho Goveral | _7B€T0P0rt of the government commissioners on tue | Manher in which he administred the duties appertain- | sumed from the hour at which the meoting opened—f¥@ | Oy Dt dictaas of the Mamestnsctee aeeeee Reenter 8 conams l. \- papi closed, I ublic has o unity again sald, “With your consent, Mr. President, 1 ahould |. ‘Wel!th seotion of thirty.ave miles of the road and tole- | struetion bills Ueseeal Conbyroad meneecd, tee Genani | transpired a3 {0 the Chances of the various ‘iekets,”” | aud was elected Prosident of the Medical Socioty several times, The skill of the deceased as a physician was Sheridan, like to take my protest with me now.”* Graph line of the Union Pacific Railroad Company was Of his political predilections nothing is known, and has been siuce statioued at Washington, | a8 the report of this commities has to bo decided on by Momentous Argoment Between the President | Te President simply anid, “Cersainly, Gonoral; Ihave | Diomilled by the Acting Secretary of the Interior to the General Committee on Cont outside world will be made acqual Very great, and gainod for bim an extensive practice. 4 Seats before the | si ut eighteen months ago his facuitios suddenly falied, od with the doings 7 President Johnson on the 27th inst., with the recom- nd thenceforward bis physical no objection. ”? , of mighty Tammany. ai physical powers gradually de- Gnd Grant on the Right of the Latter to The protest was thereupon returaed to General Grant, | Mendation that the section be accepted, and the bonds BRIDGET DURGAN. Fen yi RISE nee erereen auecarye fo bare anew ence Ware Control the Southern District who departed, declaring bis intention to isaue the order | *%4 Lp for lands due the company on account of the Sena is intended by this undertaking to subdivide and dis- N ets, without delay. The order was accordingly issued to- | "me be issued, The President on the samoday ap- | Her East Night on Earth—Scenes in and | tribute the extensive and now uncultivated lands of the Colonel William Stretch Abert, U. 8. A. - day, bearing date, however, August 27. * | proved the recommendation, and directed the issue of for the Exe- | south among the smal! and industrious capitalists of tho A telegram published In the Hanato of yesterday nounced the recent death of this offcer at Galveston, ‘Texas, where he was stationed on duty as Adjutant General to Brevet Major Genera! Grifla. The deceaseq was a son of the late Colonel J. J. Abert, of th ed States Topographical Engineers, and was born in the District of Columbia, about the year 1834, He graduated at West Point in 1855, and entered tho service as second lteutenant tn the Fourth artillery, his iug dave of Jan At the outbroak of t Lieutenant Abert remained Joyal to his colors, tho 14th of May, 1861, was promoted to the rank captain and transferred to the Sixth regiment of cavalry. Subsequently he was appointed a colonel of ay ire] which rank he held at the time of his death. Col This statement, you will notice, contradicts entirely | ‘He bonds guy coral seh 5 ericultural Statistics. Tho President Admits the Right, but | ut which repressats ibe P vrotast ond that Grunt ae. | MP J R. Dodge, Statciaa of tho Dopartmont of Agr Claims + upervisory Powers. fused to do ao, The facts are exactly asIetated, The ag opts last night upon a tour of obser- President never made any auch request, but, on the @ Northwest, to revise and complete tho list Of atatistical observers in that region, perfect the pre- contrary, told Grant ho should reply to the protest as he watene gh > of ati ee wind bs sent system of colleoting agricultural statlatics, and to | Grant Cencurs, amd Withdraws | waite on tis subject it is worth while to contradict | TePTeseat the dopartment in tho autumn fairs of tho Northwestera States, His r another mis-statement and erroneous impression. Gen- . Protest. eral Grant was not ordered to acoopt the position of Sec- | 7,4 HME pot eppbapreccn gree rotary of War, but was authorized to act ab auch, and | Aucust aro as follows no Che eh (0 the Zak oF MILITARY PiSIRICT COMMANDERS. ‘was at perfect liberty to refuse or accept as he saw fit, | Boston + $360,338 Philadelphia. + $145,404 country, These lands are now obtainabte at one-fourth New Brosawion, N. J., August 29, 1867, what they cost six years ago, when they were paying Now Brunswick ts to-night full of strangers from all — to — per cout. Rad yn wil be formed into farms of forty acres each, and their occu- Parts of the country ina radius of five hundred miles, | bation and cultivation will materially ‘teud to promote come to witness the execution of Bridget Ourgan. As I | tho work of reconstruction in the South, write in the telegraph office I can hear the tramp of Tas O'Bamw Monpsr Casa—An application will be Squads of men belonging to the Third Now Jersey | made to-day, before Judge Ingraham, of tho Superior regiment Rifle Corps, detailea to keop order at the | Court, fora writ of habeas corpus to procure the release hanging to-morrow, It is feared that the enraged | of Tuomas Kealey, now in prison, ove of the alleged populace may, im the sudden fronsy of the ay of Colonel O'Brien during the draft riots of 156 moment, take the law in their own hands. . prom Charles Munday, Lpisited tha Jol tonnight where Bridges th continede | oe ee doicbistyan & notorious thief, who in last April, in company with | Now York. 2,095.414 Baitunore, 115/869 | *Wo-story brick buiiding, with brick walls 16 feot hig fé a Abert was agallant and abie officer and bis lossto-the A general cannot be ordered to accopt a more civil posi- | Noy Orleans, fro 12th to LTib rt Torteee V@kt ica! lghia: baraings a ther call Winhows of tik cetar ne Cree oe oe ee. service will be decply rogrettod by, Ale (allow e@onenen® tion; but should he accept he can only receive compen- Island, was recapturod yosterday ‘by detectives Irvine Goneral Hancock Ordered to the Command of 703,058 | Prisoners. Ringing @ boll, Sheruf Clarkson cautious! \d Teich he pri -_—— sation in one capacity, eithor as a mili TOA, se ceseevcees eaten , ly | and Teichman, of the Twentieth precinct, The prisoner the Fifth Miilinry DistrictGeneral sherle | omcer, Thus, ppt ecedeoedy bey sac Hiss adabe wenuaec Te $8,703,058 | oops out and pulls back a massive chain. Thore is a | Will bo taken back to tho island to-day to serve his-ua- Cyrus Hamtin, Gnu Ordered to the Departinent of the Mise | Tiaitor, claims pay as acivil offloor, and not as a mili: | The following ofticers havo been detaited asa Gonoral | *™l! sitting room with a table, around which are seated expired term, about eight moaths, Among the victims of the yollow fover, now prevalent fourl—General Thomas Remains in Com- , y s adozen newspaper corrspondents writing ina hurried | FUNERAL or Youna fowarny.—Miles F. Sowerby, ® | in Now Orleans, is Cyrus Hamlin, son of Ex-Vioe Prosl- member of Hook aud Ladder Company No, 10, who was killed on Tuosday night while {a discharge of his duty at a fre in Broad atreet, by the falling of tho roof of the building, will take place this afternoon, from the resi- denoe of bis father, No. 264 Rivington atreot, The Me- saivillo Unurch, belonging to chie town, and a Miss | «-opolitan Fire Dopartmont will be represented by a de- tae — fe a of — Bridget | tailed force of two mon from each company, Tho mem Pe hy ee. bee, to Bla bers of Hook and Ladder Company No. 10 will aot as Goer te of Licibaty ne the Shoriff consonts | p41 bearers. At tbe inquest held upon his body the reporters may havea look at the prison yard | Coroner's jury brought in a verdict cousuriag the owners dent Hamlin, who died iv that city on Wednesday mora- Ing last, The deceased was a native of Maino, and im 1802 was commissioned a captain in the United States Army, and assigned to duty as ono of the additional aides-de-camp provided for by sw. On December 1864, ho was promoted to the rank of bri Perey ee § of volunteers, which position he beld uutl the close of the war, when be was musterod out of tho service, mand of the Depurtment of the Cumberland. | '#"Y Olficer. So with Gonoral Grant; he only receives Court Martial, to meet at Fort Leavenworth September ne Wasuinorox, August 20, 1867, | Pay as General-in-Chief of the army, and not one cent | 15, tor tho trial of Brovet Major General @. A. Custer, of ‘The following orders were issued to-day :— in bis capacity as Secretary of War ad interim, the Seventh cavalry, and others:—Brovet Major Genoral GENERAL ORDERS—NO, 81, As to whether General Hancock is to bo the permanent | W- Hoffman, Colonel Third infantry; Brevet Major Gen- HeADQUARTERS OF THE AnMY, } commander of the Fifth Military District, or only until | ¢r! J. W. Davidson, Licutovant Colonel Tenth caaairy; manner, The Sheriff, a quiet, country-looking person: as retteont as @ tombstone. ‘No admittance to see the prisoner’? ts written in every line of his face. No one but her spiritual advisers, Fathers Rogers and Dugan, of tho Absurawt GaNeRat’s Orrics, Genoral Thomas’ recovery, I am not fully informod, | Brovet Major General B, W. Grierson, Colonel Tenth i Wasutscrox, Auguet 27, 1867, The wording of th ordor loaves one in doubt as to the | Cavalry; Brevet Brigadior General P, Morrison, of the Firat.—The following o dors have been received from meaning; but this I can say now, that the President | Tetired list: Brovet Brigadier General H. R. Morgan, the President: — at this time foresees no cause why Hancock should not | Commissary of Subsistence; Brevet Brigadier Goneral J, Rev. Dr. Basilio Manuel Arillaga. prs Exeounive saxstox, Wasmxatos, D. ©. pha i idon it at prosont | D- Callender, of tho Ordinane Department; | S0¢,sallows. A small yard, ity foot square, with two | oe tho building with nogieot, owing to the (eat that | The 80%. DF. Basilio Manuel Anilaca, Superior Of the : August 26, 186) Pi Position pormanontiy. No idea igat provomt | peace Ticutouamt Colonel JC. é | Flgomy looking trees at opposite anglesof the enclosure, | this is the third fatal accident that has occarret upon | Jesults in Mexico, and rector of the College of Ban fide» Sm—In consequence of the unfavorable condition of | en‘ertained of making a change, Fifth mfautry; Brevet Major Hei danah hawt, from the sharitt's owa Ginter tah pres ©, | the building The Coroner refused to accept of the ver- | fonso, died in the prison there of the privationsto whiok the copepod Major Geveral FE sei tall icerag ot re; | As much hag been said about © eaat'e prota, | team enens. sae Seavel ae © feet high in’ the two uprights, and ten fest in the cross. | 40% stating that ho could receive ouly a vordict of ect | ho was subjected. Dr. Arillaga was over olghty years of Mey arder'da cr Aucust 17, 1867, i hereby modiaea | Marked “private,” in the cao of 2... Santon's re. | Otdnecce Department, | Captain beam, Is erected, ‘Tie yard ie qulte dark, and the gallows | ginal dean, and the Jury were dually compeliod ( | 474 sag was arrested by the liberal authorities, together the Th i ‘ag to assign Mujor eral Windeld S, Hancock to the | moval, afew words of explanation on tho subject will vocaie ak cee Gea . The ang Maan SoMAEGesihsaa eons tate aking belt) not be amiss. The President is mot at liberty to bes sp is leaving bis post without permission. sed Maron 2, 1867, ahd o' te First Lioutevant John sicDouald has beea ordered be- 'y depariment coinprising tho States of Louisiana and | £170 't tothe press, or he would have done so gladiy | 676 tho Retiring board at San Francisco. as, Jong ago, as his published reply in the case of Shoridan Captain GR. Walbridge, of the Veteran Regervo On being relieved trom the command of the Depart- } isa full answer, General Grant is at liberty to give it to | Corps, has been mustered out of the United States sere ‘Ghent of the Missowr! by Major General P. H: Sheridan, | ng prosy whenever he sees ft, and knows that tho | 12. ee General Ha.covck will proceed directly to New J Brovet Brigadier General J. H. Paimor, Lieutenant riespe, Louisiana, nd «suming the command to which | President does not object. The only point in it is the one | Colonel of the Second cavalry, has been permitted to hets y as. |, vil, when necessary to a faithful | that ths President has no power to remove under | delay joing bis regimens until the recruits go out in tree looks ghastly in tho starlight it is. a murdorer's moon, and bides itself away. From the interior of the I Maygattan Couizge.—The ensuing session of this eae langh sb o sire Brisoners' votoss, popular Catholic institution will commence Monday, ‘or larceny, othera for drunkooness 0 and sich peuiy crimes, Two cr three anfortunates wan, | 22Ptomber 2 Tho course of studios ia divided into pre- der up and down tho whitewashed stone corridors, Amid | prratory, commorcial, scientific and class 2 all the voices there is heard one uncouth, barbaric, gurg- | Dumber of etudonts in daily uttondance as this college Ing sound, like the moan of a wild beast in pain. "Fi | and its Preparatory schools during last dossion was over strikes the ear painfully, and now and then has the ca- | seven hundred, dence of alosteoil, That is Bridget Durgan to-nicht. Reovetion ov Exonnrtant Pricea.—A moeting of the She is conversing with tho turnkey. ‘Is there many with Bishop Ormacchea, of Vera Cruz. He was probably the most erudite scholar that Mexico has over produ and at some time or other had undey his tutorship the moat prominent and emiuent mea of his country. Ie 1865 the Abbé Tostory, heat chaplain of the ob forces, wrote a pamphiet in di 08 of the nationalina tion of Oburch property. In the courso of his remarks he characterized the biextcan clergy as ignorant and cor. rupt. Dr. Arillaga replied to this brochure im three pam- phlets, and brought down upon the Abbe Testory the exeoution of the law:, exerciz0 any and all powers con- i October, itizens of the Teuth ward Nd I fT 45 : the rut! a \. : ” citizens of the Teuth ward was held last evoning at indignation of alt unioterested foreigners thon in Mexioe, ’ i I , ? ' has daotielebeat aaettt uh. pothine” | tic statistics, wit and sa erliaps nothing oontei Sie ASORIIDOON sn will ‘hence ae | Ganeral saye im this protest thet it was takiogadvantage | Boatom | NER ee Be dcakies Wue loraing and ae pele mi achee tien [ t ee bags cadet ae ea eta ane bey bo moro to tho estrangement tne native in 44 ret jor Gonoral mory has been ordero “ " vt in and flour, which hat ot of tame weigh ists and foreign interventionists, and ultimat Bis prosent command vs tno ofhcar next in rank to bin i the ai Paleears! of seniert to —— hire St | to relieve Gonerat Canby ta tho command of the Deparc. | Pheutzes tent to the same wild beat laugh again, and | reavily on the working clases of this o#ly, Mr. Joha | downfall of ive empire, than thts pamphiet of tho AD A 1, thout deiay toFort Leavenworth, | the present time, and that it shou! ave | ment of Wasbington. furnished ber by some person connectod with the prison. | W. Farmer officiated as Prosident, aod Mr, John 3, | Tostory. The memory of Dr. Ariilaga wil bo revered all Mexicans, without distinction of party. . heen v ve carta of thecom- | been done while Congress was in session. Navy Bulletin, ge H, Tuomas will, until furthor | From tho above statement it’will be cen that it ts Acting Masters F, A. Stranborg and Jacob Kimball, remain in cumnand of the Department of the | out of tho power of the President to give to the public | and Acting Ensigns C, A. Stewart, John D. Thomas and Cumberlaod, Grant's protest in the case of the modified order for the | John L. Brown have been dotachod from the Saco and “7 guoss I'll take a bath now; K'll do me good.” An- | Rogers explained that the chief objoct of the moolug other draught trom the whiskey flask. Then comesater- | was to combiue in proper organisation and effect rible spasm, “he is thinking of sbat night when she | much dosired reduction tn tho prices of coal and flour. stole upon Mrs. Coriell with the step of a panther, hacked | Tno latter, it was contended, could be purchased for her to pioces with a butcher kuife, dospite the tears | $10 50 por barrol, delivered at the door, and tho former Cardinal Lo Altiort. Our advices from Europe announce tho death from yv Tospectfally yours, ANDREW JOHNSON, . | Temoval of Sheridan (that having been withdrawn), and ordered North, ‘Acting Passed Assistant Surgeon Wit- | add prayers of her v ott Now she fs eeging at er er ten. i chee Per eet Goel er By ihe cholora on tho 11th instant, at Albano, noar Rome, ae To General U. S. Guan, Secretary of War ad interim, | equally go in the case of tho lotter markod “private,” | liam Gale has been ordered to the Yucca. — Acting En. | at the roots of her coarse bia k hair, like a “len: || Cone < | this distinguished Roman Catholic prolate, The ig al long night wakes, and the ligh t ridor fick at oost, or twenty-live cout lore thaa the general _' Second. —In compiiance with the foregolug instructions | Grant can publish both whenever he chooses, Lee cee ase tt Vere bas boon honotabiy dlacuarged, | SOF Stier, making dismal ‘and ghoslly shadows on | public uacally gives Ld : ceased was descended from an ancient and princely the Presidont of the United States, Major Genoral P. It will also be geen that 00 open rupture has occurred, the white walls of the prison. There are ten colls in Srappixa Avraay.—Georgé Hall ia a seafaring man. | bouse, and was the vrother of the h f the iy ue Sheridan will, on receipt of this order, turn over bis | and | may add that 1 am {oformed General Grant has THE PRESIDENT AND THE CABINET. bevy poor tister rah alert ‘ne prisoners stand He is a stoward, and attached in that capacity to a voe- | ment Altiert, He bee} born tt Ror ~ as, by present command to Brovet Major General Charles | not expressed any intention to resign. What aday may {Tetegram to the Boston Post.) conflict going on batween the lost woman and the ehadow | aol which gails from this port Peter Coleman ts an | Ho.inags Pope Gregory X the title of tants Maria #riffin, the officer next in rank to himself, and proceed | bring forth, however, the writer asith not, 7 ee Wastnarcn, ——- 196T, which pr oie agi ee eT ea oe the hor, ba artist on the violin, but is vulgarty called in the noigh- Portion, Cardinal Alt Mig hen ne = vere in A ve rief interview with @ Presidont nevor out,"” a rat jamberlaia 5 fwithout delay to Foit Leavenworth, Kansas, and will The Feeling tn Richmond. searnon yon CorteepouMenl. seued tins Iorab ener borhood in which bo resides fiddler, George did love | First Champaran 0 te a Fees dor of the University of waid another, “she'll get her Al! of whiskey, how; I wish I had half of her complaint.” | a ‘‘iadye fairo’—one of those bright seraphio beinze On the 6th of July, when the asgro Williams was avout | which render Water sireet so briliiant, George did go leaving the prison tor the scaffold, he stood at the cell | to sea, and whon he had gone 1 did go to see Miss door of Bridget, pintoned and bilndfoided, with the | Susan, as tho damsel was styied, ‘aocording to 6 ‘black oap drawa over his face, He camo to bid her | port, was woll receivod. But George 0 back agaia, aod good-by. Sho was eitting with herback to tho coll | inhis pockets he had ‘“duca‘s.’" Petor had fidied as xe twirling her Qagors in @ vacant mannor, The | much as he knew how whiio George was gone, but Le ed man spoke to he: “Good-by, Bridget,"’ | could not raiso th aa readily as Sugan wished, Welieve Major General Hancock, in command of the De- A telegram from Riobmond, Va., this evening states | giiioriaiive ax to to wild stories about the Cabinet dis- Rome. He was a most learned and pious divine, partment of the Missouri, that General Grant’s change of base tn the Sheridan- | soiusion, to whicw ths Pres repiied, “You may ee hi he , telegraph that I havo not rec any re-ienation nut F4Zhird,—On being rolioved by Major General Sheridan, | Siokles attair, by lesuing the orders for thoi reilef, gives | Sousrunh (rat T lars mt reealhed Hey te mot PMajor Gencrai Hancock will proceed without dolay to | Immonse satisfaction to the cOnsorvatives and republi- ssi “Blois Orloans, Louisiana, and assume command of the | cans there. The radicals who crowed 60 loudly yoa- a . Bee et Military district and of ths depariment composed | tFday aro quite chopfallen to-tay. The progress of THE NEW BE TRICT COMMAISDERS, William A. Bradley. Wasuxarou, Angust 29, 186%, Information has been received of the death of Wiiiant A. Bradley, of tunis ony, at Round Top, yosterday, aced_ seventy-three years, He was {ormoriy Mayor of Wash- ington and Postmaster cf thia city during the admials- the Btates i . events in Washington te watehod with muci anxioty. % LaRee aca . and hi w the biack | so that when Goor; ned and she saw the “ducata’ pease tsjor Toners! caneee rT wilioon The important positions to which Genorals Hancock ere nad filed wah, tho ‘most | she determiaed to bo his duck” at onoe, and thus the | tation of Harrison and Lyler, and Taylor and Pulmoce, e and Canby bave beon as ed by the Prosident will, be- /e1 nd yells, Ademou seomed to possess | kaight of the bow was discarded Bus this manwuvr> ole inane pe neggairnguiamgmet cian edanng Her sont te fore tmany days have paced, place thom en pramicine, | hog, aud she tore ler fingers, ecraiching tho walle with | put.a ‘fos ia tho fiddle” of Peter, and teritated him #0 Death of teaneens Soe eee ‘Bycommand of Genoral GRANT, Wazuinatox, Auguat 29, 1867. pighhe Prominonuly | insane terror, To-morrow sho will have io watk Gfiy | much that he determined to Lave an understanding. Kuzauerarort, N. J., Au ), 1867. 7H. D. Townsann, Adjutant Genoral. General Grant’s Last L eiteute kes Pre id ne before tho peoplo as they wore during the rebellion. | feet corridor and forty-six feet roin the iron prison | Last night contain for Susan's love met Codd rc Lace gr ey womyes epee the Now Jorsoy i —— 3 © President. | Below will bo found b Ce e scaffold, only ninety-six feet in all, but to her | corner of Waver and Roosevelt sirecis ant atalk, mire road, ere morning. ti I¢is known that General Grant took especial care t0 | yico9 of jogo antenna hs ee eee with tho grave yawniog at the end of her But they did not, talk: much before Hall did ‘haul’ 8 6" Td . - worney, Will sho be abi traverse that short space ¢ | knife out, and making a lou at Poter cut htm y. PEN! ZORGIA. essay gece NN oh one ie ia 22 cate! pea aig eet 9 9 ome prison authorities doubt her ability. Woll, thore ia | but not seriously, on the side of the head. George was NEWSPAPER SUSPERDED IN GE036iA Wasmxatox, August 29, 1867, standing his caution sev papor correspondents | Brovet Mujor dienernl Winfleld Scott alteruative. Let her be drugged with apple jack, | arrested and locked up, and Poter, after having bis Wasntvcrow, D. C., August 20, 186Y, he Facts Retntive to the Reported Rupture | % the evening of the same day became soquained with Hane sbief consolation of a Jersey democrat. A drunkon | wound dressed, weat home. The Charleston Courier of Wednosday cays (bat the Albony (Ga.) News bas boon suspended vy Goneial Pope, tian‘ae confined im eo upper ceil, Has’ Anuxst oF 4 SHoruirter.—Detective Woolsey, of the on the gonoral charge of disioyalty. ims by name, and ail the long weary nights the ,alr (e filed with md Broadway squad, while walking dowa Broadway yestor- ic. Betweeu Grant and the President=Interview | '# rea! character, much to the surprise of General Grant, Gencral Hancock, who bas been ordered to take se jac yells, Every tow Between Thew on the Right of Control in as aubsequently expressed, The lotter did not reach the | Command of the Fifi Musary District, is the pre- demon! tes there - the South-Grant’s Right Under the Law | Fresidont untli the next day (fuesday). The first inti. sent commander of the Department of the Missouri. | a cessation ol mia Fo4e, 304 thon ‘be Takes. enoiter Ot, | day afternoon, observed three rather suspicious looking CLOSE OF A WHISKEY CASE IN PITTSBURG: nowledged by the Presid: bi mation of the contents of the communioation aid not | He t# a native of Montgomery county, Pa, whore | ead bumps acd smash 's bis bead the tron door. | characters lounging along the strest without aay appa- — therefore come from either of these gentlemen, he was born on Februsry 14, 18%, He entered West oo Mo apa) pe Rego Ho determined to follow them and aoe if Prrenuna, Pa. August $0; 1007. rent upon oS at can ron faore up to aby Nat They yo womas till six o'clook in the morning, when she will be | store of @. W. Freuob, 607 Broadway, and one of thom rolleved by Fathors Dugan and Rogers, who will remain | taking a box of men's undergarments from ihe counter with hor until she is led out to the execution at ten | walked out, but Woolsey met bim aad a. ES o'clock, To-night at 8 o'clock Bridget contessed to . His companions immediatety docam: ae Father Dugao and received absolution. At six | Culprit was brought to Police Mesdgnamens, spare o'clock to-morrow morning sho will receive tho last eg same as John Ward and stated that he wase acral S tion, : = ae i. fy Ae Drowxap Waite Batano.—Philip Reilly, a young Le argge gestern dy eng Plage) gg man, was drowned about nine o'clock ist night while ret ee a ent eit ea done | Dathing at the foot of Twenty-soveuin siroot, North A vorus river. Pagiment of N ppg my ot Fatat Ratzoan Aoctornt3.—The inquisition in the case of the unknown man who was killed by being right resting on | pore Hat pedirigry: me siruok by a locomotive belonging to the Hudson River ‘Tho trial before Juare McCandles, of States Circuit Court, in the cave ot Barber & Lore | whose rectifying estadiishmeat was seized Linton, United Biates revenue ageut, was oe day, ‘Tue-{ury rendered s verdict agaiest the deo fondants. & The Reported Difference Between the Presi. | Point Academy in 1640, and graduated Go.the tact correspondence between the President and dent and General Grant. and honorably on June 30, 1844 On the Ist of July Graatthat tt is worth while to let the public ‘The National In'eliégencer of Wo-day feels authorized to | foliowing he was assigned to the regular service as the real truth of the matter, It has been repre- } state that the reports Of any personal differences be- | brevet second lioutenant in the Sixth infantry, With that an open ruptare cocurred between these two | tween the President and ‘General Grants are unfounded, | his rogimeat he served in the Woet until tho out. that Genera! Grant signified his intention of re- | but that paper is not correct in amnouncing In the same | broak of the Mexican war, when his command was the atduous duties of the War Office, and that this | connention:—‘Whatover may be their respective views | ordered to the scene of hostiilties. For gallant and this proposed resignation were caused by an | as to matters of detail there is no conflict between thom | and meritorious conduct at the battles of lable difference of opinion. What is the simplo | as to the prerogatives of each."' Contrary to this, itis | Controras and Cherubusco he was brevetted ~ General Grant, on receiving the President’s | known that there is a very decided difference of views | first lieutenant, and before leaving Mexico received the wrder assigning Genera! Hancock to the command of the | on legal questions affecting their rospeotive powers and | fuil commission of that rank. Subsequently ho was pro. Military district, wrote the President another pro- | duties under the Reconstruction acts, moted to the staf rank of captain transierred to the and comments Miss Sallivan will sit up alt aM F swowt, A — «i Messrs. Innis & Buckland’s crt a ane pend caught fire at two o'clock this afteraven, Ureiy consumed, Loss $25,000; insured for $6,008" , Inthe Eyenlog Telegram =, s fs WILL BE POUND DAILY see ee In this protest he gave sevoral reasons why the Quartermaster's Dopartment, aud in that department e e e ahould not be dove, the main one boing that Con- MISCELLANEOUS WASHINGTON NEWS. served in Florida against the Sominole Indians and in | mand of Colonel De Hart, to prevent any attempt by Railroad Company, corner of Fifiy-sovoath strest and | ” rie LATEST NEWS FROM RUROPE BY CABLE. had given the power of onforcing the Recon- . : rs the expedition 10 Utah under General Harney. On the | (fOW4 st Ivuohing. Those precautions are deemed | Eleventh avenue, on Tuesday last, as alresdy reponed © | Special TKLEGRAMS FROM ALL PART OF fren eens 14 7. On necossary, the greatest feeling is still preva- ‘was yesterday concluded belore Coroner a} jon iaws almost exclusively to the General- 7. vee 20, 100% ‘Dreakiog out of tho roveliion Captaiu Haucock was sta- | inn, in town regarding to the murder, it is | Schirmer at Bellevue Hospital. The evidence showed | | Toon ee who was thereby compelled by law asmimdTos, Augu 9 an spony Si nt in Californie, but in obedience | believed that at least Uhre thousand strangers will be | the occurrence to have been accidental, and tke jury ac- Su.emem-gniens ste Snel ° em p afin Aa es ein ery le Ae Tho Interview Betwoon the Presi eibeee ot uae ogton, and on | present to morrow at the execution. Four bundrod | cordingly rendered a verdict to that effect, Theres: | 4 9g ungnt Fath gals Uy an ee ee assume los ipo! eof. Colored Lawyer Langet September, |, Was commissior rigadior been issued by the Sheriff, as usu dence, age and nativity of deceased are unknown. ALL THE LOCAL NEWS. Fe (Grant) could not relieve himself of this | yruch has beon said ia reference to the visit to the . fp emn e hed foe pe gen s iea,'’ to proserve order in the interior of the Yesterday afternoon Coroner Schirmer received in- | + 0 eee ee lity, Among other reasons adduced were | prosideat of the colored lawyer, J. M. Langston, In- | 1861-8 bis TLewinsviile, a, and pied age lly a iy ng Pg Rogers for bis dia: | formation that & man about hig ve years Ca i POLICH AND COURT MATTERS. 5 mo a mortem i bam from & —That General Hancock ought not to be removed | syector of Education in the Freodmen’s Bureau, Sove- pear coe enacterin Cent Kit rumors that the. prisoner was enceinie are | hat makers found in his pousess.on, Is supposed tohave |, LABOR MOVEMENTS, ial . Without Grst consulting his wishes; that New Orleans | ru! journals havo published what purported to be the | Srodeilautsarspsthen.on the Peninvaie, and ie sorvices | {2122 Bee, eS Siar te eeatee eaages | Seceaeer contuntoatas to tee, Wadeve Rive SPORTING INTELLIGRNOR FROM ALL PARTS OF ig @ most unhealthy condition, owing to the preva | conversation which passed between the President and | betore Yorktown wetese important and meritorious that | has seule hitherto that she has any relatives ia thie road Ooeapaay ,THE COUNTRY, x é s d almost instantly killed, A tobacco country ; bat the umdertaker who has charge of the | box bearing tials M. H. was also found in one of funeral states to-night publicly that be bas orders from | his pockets, Deceased had ou a brown coat, plaid pants Bridget's brother, who reeides iu New York, to spare no | and vost. Ho hed black bair and mustacho, An expense in the funeral arrangements, Bridget will be | quest wili be held to-day. attired to-morrow in a brown alpaca dress and under- . . . . NEW JERSEY, LONG ISLAND, WESTOHESTER AND STATEN ISLAND NEWS. . . . Creat . . A GUIDE AND DIREOTORY OF THE WAYS OF Of yellow fever; that several officors had been | yr Langston at the interviow, which statements are | he was broveted = Taper tho regular army. At the vem leave of absence 1a consequence of the preva- | utterly devoid of truth. The facts, concisely stated, patito oe vee sre Ae gah oa gal- : of this terrible disease; that the step would be | are as follows:—The President did not send for Mr. | mium of ‘‘brilliant tm the extreme,” besides wia- to the wishes of the people, and that the | rangston; that gentleman called upon the Exeoutive | Ding for bim the Fank of lieutenant ring th y battles t LEAVING NEW YORK, iiven by the President for the change were Bot | and was admitted to an euaionce. He sated to the icbmond Ueneral Haneowk uniee @utteutshed firm. | cioining OF the same material, Ber hate being combed THE ROYAL INSURANCE BOND ROBBERY. * pinior Sinead navoee, wnat ain it, in his (Grant's) jadgment, to justify it, President that as he had been travolling a great doai | eolf, and received his third promotion to the rank of ‘This case was resumed yesterday ‘at the Tombs Police HOUSEREEPERS AND COOKS. e'Et may be stated pareathetically here that when | throug the uareconstrucied States, he thought an ac. | Colonel, AL the battle of | Fredericksburg, | fought ‘Thomas was ordered to command the Fifth dis | count of what he bad observed would probably be ac- pret Tought nobly, he recelving asevere List or THE SAVINGS BANKS IN TRE orrr. wound and e - oe “4 b te ~ Grant never asked whethor be had any objections, | opcadle to the President. Mr, Johnson replied that he | losing a large number of his men. For bis gaitadtcy on THE AMUSEMENTS IN THB METROPOLIS, . * . . .e © NEW JERSEY INTELLIGENCE. Court, before Justice Hogan. — Mrs-Griffin was again placed upon the stand, and the ° ° that Dan | ¢ ° instantly isqued the order and received Thomas’ this occasion President Lincoln appointed him @ mayor Jersey City. substance of the rest of her testimony was pea : eallemm ‘o. uysliow jack,"” which ought to | Tan iad {2 have the opportunity of Rearing from the | general of volunteers, and in command of a division | Onancx or Provony Acaiver a Pouca Oerican—On Tuts | Noble was living ia fine style at Elmira, having fae | ¢ 9 PRREONAL, INTRLLIORNOB), = sg Dave beon as strong m his case as in Han- Ganew bee his prori ks, Mt Seapeen thee anaes cody batie of Chaaceliorsvilie. Dariag ine Femme ay last Mr. Terence O'Noill, of this city, was arrested | horses and two buggies; that his houso was elegant, and | , « GENERAL NEWS OF THE Day. . Gook’s, and that it is hardly kind to expose Little bs od ‘bovis ot kis onmevuiite the nk tak syivania ‘oara ign Goneral Hancock ‘was’ placed fa | by oMcer Jonoph Smith, on the charge of interfering | bis own dross and that of his wife extravagant; that ho | | « OQS8IP, FACETI®, AND FORTRY. | 4! Phil to the dangers of the unpleasant fever, and thus abe a command of ¢! yd Arm: and at Gottysbarg | with him in the discharge of his duty, and held to ball | acknowledged owing her husband $60,000, which would da, Or. ce . gave an encouraging account of the condition | was so severcly wounded in the thigh that he was com | to answer bofore the Grand Jury. Mr. O'Neill, who, on | be made ail right, and that she made several trips from I, pes, Missin, aces JOU allie, owes. . . THE EVENING TELEGRAM HAS THE LARORST CIRCULATION OF ANY RVENING PAPER PUBLISHED. was again in a aeain in | the day tm question, was apparently taken by surprise, | Canada to New York and Elmira, with messages from ia, as report says, a quiet and tnoflensive citizen, an sbal Dan Noble, ‘of considerable property, He denied the |", one ores exnmnyustion she testified that she lives charge, and distinctly stated he neither thought of, paw | a, a1, Catherines; that hor husband keeps a ‘club room’’ TN ee ee ee ST comity nn | 0s am ae hee net ay CREE Scene Iatter swore the offence was committed. Accordingly be | nouse or not; that she could not say whether took out a warrant yortorday for the apprehension of | ii'was a resort of thieves and gamblers) thal since her Smith on a charge of porjury, and had bim arrested and | resiienco at St, Catherines she recoived $3,000 from hold to bail in $500 to answer the conmpiaint. her husband; that she kept » baak account in St. Ca- Avormen Aocioaxt at 4 Kinosexn Factony.—Henry | therines; teehee husband Jn) Iimeett foutly Cross, an employé in the Kerosene oll rofinery of Mr. | HTOREN .Netidee did mot undersiand that If more of Verplanck, on Provost street, tho same establishment | tne stolen property was restored her husband would Where © man was injured last Saturday, was badly | aot be prosecuted, nor that If the present prosecution soalded in the right arm on Tussday, He is recovering | was the means of recovering more of the property and able to resume work. hor husband would not be prosecuted; nover heard Hoboken, that her bosband had been in the State Prison four Scicrz of 4 Lap. —Ernest Sternberg, sixteen yours of Smee whos being yon age, and employed in s gold broker's office in Wall street, | ‘hereto committed suicide at bis residence night before iast. Ho was subject to spells of violent headache which caused ~ ; such wonte eaaerie as to often prompt him to say he | would FD ne i would kill himself if another attack eame on, Wednesday. p «J i” aivane tated pM ye Fe ee ee aa cate ec uingie | know whethor nine hnodred dollars in gold an Tarvoled’ piitol discharged it at hie’right temple, Halt | hundred doulare im sliver that she got from s maa in of the skull was blown away, scattering tho brains on | Buffalo wasany part of the proceeds of the . stolen the wall and around the room, and causing death in- on the subje Hj stantaneously, Tho Coroner was notified and hold an in- quest, whon a verdict in accordance with the facts was revurned by the jury. patbim off asa candidate for the Presidency. It may | of the colored race in Mississippi, Alabama | polled to leavo the field. Ia April, 1! ; ‘be thought that Iam exaggerating General Grant’s letter | ang other Siates visited by him, The Presi- | Command of the corps, and partici; Shon I state that this was really one of the objections; | dent answered that he was gratified to hear | apsinu Lee. At Spoiteylvania Court Hi Dut you may rely upon it that I do no such thing. $0 favorably from that portion of the country, and | 12, 1364, the General obtaiued xy moat signal euc + However, to return to the main point. After the | said that there Was one method of instracting the arcs are ae President recived this provest, General Grant called at | gotored people for their new position as citicens he quently was briliant and sucoseful ‘and he would Bhe White House and had along intorview with Mr. | would like to see adopted; that, in his opinion, it would | doubtioss have gained many additional laurols had not ‘Johnson ing of bia wounds compelled a retirement on the ‘subject The interview was not | accomplish more good than books, iracls, ke, The | fen 'tne nolan the fall of 1904, At the slow of the @lormy, nor pessionate, nor unfriendly, The Com- | method referred to, ho said, was that the colored people | war the General was in command of the Middie Military mander-in-Chief sod Genoral-in-Chief talked the | should be taught by the more intelligent and educated | Division, withh eadquarters at Winchester and subse~ Waiter over ab great length and m8 | of their race the true meaning of liberty and citizenship; | quentiy at Belumores Tass year te a ore aians, calm, dispassionate manner, The President, with | that 1iderty meant, also, the right to labor for their own | There is, pera, ‘no man in the service, © Who protest before him, took up all the objections of | support, and not be dependent upon others. Mr. Langston | Generals Grant, Snermaa, Sheridan and Thowas, wi {Grant and answored them reriatum, He callod attontion | thon suggested that it was psrhaps no more than fair reourd during the rebeiion te go bei = offen gg ‘a very biunt way to one part of the protest—that re- | that colored men should enjoy @ reasonable share | known, although he is said to ha supported to General Grant's powers and duties under the | of offices, and mentioned the position of Minister to hecletian for the Presidency in 1864, 1965 he ro- r ‘Reconstruction acts, and remarked that Grant's language | Hayt; as an office that might be appropriately given toa | ved [i ao his services; was pro- +" Pathor smacked of farubordination. General Grant ox- | colored man, Many positions in the Freedmen's Bureau, | Tasrand to that of brevet mulor genersl of the ro that the reason he used such language was be- | no added, might be advantageously filled by colored | army in —- the same year; which iast @ause ho believed Congress bad imposed such powers | mon, The President then inquired of Mr. Langston tioned rank he now held, Bnd duties upon him independent of the President, whethor he thought the office of Commissioner of Freed. | Brevet Major General Edward R. S.C ‘The President replied that, though Congress had invest- | men’s Affairs could not be suitably filed by some promi. | The new commander of the Second Military \pa the Gonerat with such powers, still thoy were subject to | nent leader among the colored people, Mr, Langston | hasbeen for some time past on duty at Washington. Phesapervision and contro! of the supreme executive | replied that he thought it could, and eaid that he would | He is a native of Kentucky, ip whioh State he was head of the nation, Ho explained that should any other | consult with somo of the leading men of his color on the | born about the yoar 1510, Ho graduated at West Point ‘construction and interpretation be given ali discipline, | ganjeot, and asked if the President would grant him an- | {n 1890, !n the second class, with Generais Halleck, ‘Pudordination and good order must be lost, and the | otuer audience in a fow days, to which tho President re- | Ord, Stevens and others. Entering the army as sxcond Grmy itself demoralized, Tho. Goneral-in-Ohief would | ptied that he would be gind to see bina at any time. | Heatonant of infantry during the samo year, he was as- Ponstrue one way, the lieutenant general soother, the | From that time to the present Mr. Johnson haa not | signed tothe Second regiment of infantry, and at the ‘Major goneral another, and the brigadier another, and #0 | seen Mr. Langston, outbronk of the Mexican war was appointed an assistant Gown to the lieutenant of a company. It was plain then ‘The foregoing is briefly al! that pasvod at that inter | adjutant general, with the rank of captain, At the The Evening ‘clegram toedny will contnis @: full account of ‘xeoution of get Durgan, 4 —' neous, Factory Al Barclay street, . BARE CVI Bt eT toe, ne a gold medal, th perfection of Se lachines betircietecnne fh iy gp medals Mie medal at W. jons nothing is General LER & WILSON’ nor how tong before told her that e Pb for oer the, Ezaning wEisenee of Relig lta! the Murderess, PEL fe NS bes HSSaiews, New fork 5 Stans” Os Rake WEY Promtem Sewtnn roadway, Pe rg tr FS peg run Dre Soe Blast Se Rees iy ore teneeay AY Manne hority, from her, husband her husband ALLEGED FORGERY AT MADISON, WIS. be by Nobln by flan Promisor mado to him and Mavisow, Wis., August 20, 1807, | (0,ROF that Oe ec pposed the proceeds of the bond Last Wook a map, under ‘the guise of s| Baptist | © yt U4 Ly Preacher, calling himself A. Burns, succeeded in gotting robbery ; abi dif ng gobi eon gg ry Alleged forced drafts om the Tenth National Bank of New York castes ns he First National Bank of this city, to the oe peneey Sevis eeareennee; fart amount of $7,000, and decampod for parts unknown. by_& police officer on th subject’ f being a witness bil Insta Depot, % Duaue street. ‘hat such « view would load to the reductio ad abrurdum. | yiew, and forms the ground for the statements just | batties of Cerro Gordo, Contreras and Cherubusco be | two, 'y-five haudred dollars reward has beon offered for a against Noble; was called on by lawyer Rackett, of Can- Len & Perrin’s Sauce—Delicious with Soup. only rational view woul he 7 uished bimsoif, for which he was pro- | his capture aad the recovery of the money. . | tah, ‘tne oniy 14 bo that the Press | now going the rounds that the Prosident sent for Lang- | greatly dieting: 1 pe received $30 from the SOrapARY 0 Dey Perel, | JUMN DUNCAN'S GONG, Agents for ihe United Slates Now York; her fai ness, business for bimeslf; bas made him some Presents since December iast, amounting altogether to New Ontraya, August 20, 1967. ‘abo 200, beni some to pay devia of herself and General Reynolds has established a quarantine between | iaband; did not remember the amount teken Brownsville and Corpus Christi, Ag yot uo case of fever | to him: could not say if it was two or has appeared at Brownsville, three thousand dollars; no mortgage has boon “aeot, who, under the constitution, was Commander-in- | ston formally offered to him the position of Com- | moted to the rank of major, During the attack on the and the Chief Executive, charged with the duty | missioner of the Freedmen’s Bureau, which was re- | De Belon gato of the city of Mexico his conduct was 40 “posing the laws faithfully executed,” should be tho | fused, és gallant that he was recommended for promotion to the ‘entitled to construe the laws so far as their en- | Charges Against the Internal Revenue Co rank of lieutenant colonel, which he obtaimed in 1847, ‘# concerned, How else could government although the commission was not confirmed until THE YELLOW FEVER AT CORPUS CHRISTI. P; atite taJulce, of _ Anth: = os, = For hearts Pe agitas sored tas on? Congress might give General Grant many nh : ~ Marob, 1661, Those promotions were mem the peetateirestSccex: ene wR paid of of any of oc yee Eon, 4 as it gave powers to the War, Navy, State, | of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue 0 ground teor service; but in 1857 he was commissioned ISTRATION IN the 10th of Desember with any mo! ® ‘ and Interior Departments, but it could not | of incompetency. It 1s charged against him that his beam: in in the lar army; in 1855 major of the be ee er home since then; went by, the names of phy pio gat gadeapteeamirs Eokcerts J -? Eterm te Penna is eonntstionl power ot | inenmptney wo acharge ho Gun ohn one nw | Toth rrnt of err eed BUM eS | ase oy ai angle iced | Oe tm tory Wim beset boat am cee 2 3 ng and Caithfully execsting thetaws, The Pre- | clustvoly manifested ta hie failure to collect the tax on | Nineteonth resent,» 0 Uie, ANOPN SY Mevieo, wad headgaariera show, the rugisration b of iran Ie a inen 826,000; the married Bit so soon set nQramsetat ad alone waa, reeponsible to Congress and the people | whiskey or to wuppres the whiskey frauds, Tits fur~ | his refusal o surrender W the rebels of to evacuale the } 470,000; Sesto 90,009, Dasuuse she wasted 1s tenghien were, married b ae Bevel eae rie! ‘be abused his powers or commitied etrore | ther charged bat he bat tailed or refused to | serritory stamped Blu A muna of lozeity aud dejerminny 4 {0m Coas wil KiLs Large White qunjosiviem beige, Faiuer i i